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Wednesday, October 23, 2013

12 Days of Christmas - Faux Mosaic/Stained Glass

Mark's Finest Papers, a Heinrich Company is having a series of challenges to celebrate 12 Days of Christmas. We're doing it in October so that, if you find something you like, you've got plenty of time to create one or more items between now and Christmas. Today I am presenting a tutorial for a technique I learned a couple of years ago -- Faux Mosaic/Stained Glass. It makes a very nice Christmas card -- or perhaps a small picture you could hang on the wall.

This is the card I made for the 12 Days of Christmas:

This technique is basically an Embossing Resist technique,
with a little twist.

Supplies needed:

Hand-made mosaic background stamp

Versamark

Clear embossing powder

Heat tool

Black ink (I used Memento Tuxedo Black)

Colored image

Several stamp companies provide their rubber stamps on one
big sheet of rubber, and the customer punches or cuts out each individual
image. This leaves lots of excess rubber. To make the background stamp, take the excess
rubber and cut it into smaller pieces.

Glue the small pieces of rubber onto a piece of wood or
acrylic block. My brother-in-law cut two
pieces of wood for my sister and me to make our background stamps. Here is a close-up of the stamp.

STEP ONE

Color your image and cut to size.

STEP TWO

Apply Versamark over the entire background stamp.

STEP THREE

Stamp onto the colored image. I usually do this upside down so that I can
make sure the Versamark is applied on the entire image.

STEP FOUR

Sprinkle the image with Clear Embossing Powder.

This photo shows the entire image covered in embossing
powder. If you look closely, you can see
the lines where the embossing powder did not stick.

STEP FIVE

Emboss the image using a heat gun. When finished, you will see the shiny parts
which were covered with the clear embossing powder.

STEP SIX

Here comes the scary part.
Rub the entire image with black ink.

STEP SEVEN

With a paper towel, wipe off the black ink. You can see that the sections covered with
Versamark and clear embossed are wiping relatively clean, but the black is
staying in the lines between the sections.

Clownmom

A little about me

My name is Lois, and I've been stamping since 2006. I retired a couple of years ago; and, although I volunteer at my church and a local non-profit, I do spend a great deal of my energies on this exciting hobby. My late husband and I raised three children, and I have eight grandchildren -- from age 9 to 27.